Department of Biology, Hamilton College, Clinton, NY 13425, USA.
Office of Undergraduate Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Trends Parasitol. 2019 Mar;35(3):182-192. doi: 10.1016/j.pt.2018.12.002. Epub 2019 Jan 29.
Body size influences many traits including those that affect host competence, the propensity to cause new infections. Here, we employ a new framework to reveal that, for at least two infections, West Nile virus and Lyme disease, large hosts should be more competent than small ones, but their lower abundance could mitigate their impacts on local risk. By contrast, for rabies, small hosts will be disproportionately more competent than large ones, an effect amplified by the higher densities of small species. These outcomes differ quite a bit from previous approaches that incorporate allometries into epidemiological models. Subsequently, we advocate for future integrative work to resolve how interspecific variation in body size influences the emergence and spread of infections.
体型大小会影响许多特征,包括那些影响宿主能力、引发新感染的特征。在这里,我们采用一种新的框架来揭示,至少对于两种感染,即西尼罗河病毒和莱姆病,大型宿主应该比小型宿主更具传染性,但它们的低丰度可能会减轻它们对当地风险的影响。相比之下,对于狂犬病,小型宿主的传染性将不成比例地高于大型宿主,而小型物种的更高密度会放大这种效应。这些结果与以前将生物比例关系纳入流行病学模型的方法有很大不同。因此,我们提倡未来进行综合工作,以解决物种间体型大小的差异如何影响感染的出现和传播。